CULS has opened a new pavilion

On 12 September, with the participation of public figures and individuals from the academic sphere, the Center for Economic and Managerial Studies II of the CULS Faculty of Economics and Management was opened.

Climate change will affect fish communities

According to a study by scientists from the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague and the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (Berlin, Germany), climate change and land use will cause significant changes in the composition of fish communities in the river network by 2050. The article was published by the prestigious scientific journal Global Change Biology.

Climate change endangers forests around the world

A recent study in the Nature Climate Change journal, published by an international team of experts from the CULS Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences and the Faculty of Environmental Sciences, shows that ongoing climate change will significantly increase the frequency of large-scale calamities of economic forests.

Garden Party for CULS Graduates and Friends – 10 June 2017

At noon on Saturday, 10 June, good old swing performed by the CULS Life Orchestra welcomed the first graduates who arrived to the CULS Prague – Suchdol campus. Approximately four and a half thousand came to CULS during the afternoon.

On Monday 11 September, together with the university management, CULS Rector prof. Jiří Balík accepted successful young biologists who had represented the Czech Republic in July at the 28th International Biology Olympiad in Coventry, UK.

On 12 September, with the participation of public figures and individuals from the academic sphere, the Center for Economic and Managerial Studies II of the CULS Faculty of Economics and Management was opened.

According to a study by scientists from the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague and the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (Berlin, Germany), climate change and land use will cause significant changes in the composition of fish communities in the river network by 2050. The article was published by the prestigious scientific journal Global Change Biology.